Service worker resources

May 2nd, 2018

At the end of my new book, Going Offline, I have a little collection of resources relating to service workers. Here’s how I introduce them:

If this book were a podcast, then this would be the point at which I would be imploring you to rate me on iTunes (or I’d be telling you about a really good mattress). Instead, I’d like to give you some hyperlinks so that you can explore some of the topics in this brief book in more detail.

It always feels a little strange to publish a list of hyperlinks in a physical book, so I figured I’d republish them here for easy access…

Responses

I am proud to be offering a new feature on this site: offline content. At the moment, the majority of my content is in my travel blog. Although it’s mostly pretty pictures, I wrote up a few of our more involved transport adventures and they quickly rose to the top of my analytics.

People are reading this travel info, but I know from experience that they probably don’t have access to it in the moment of need when they’re on the road, at a bus station, or in the mountains at a tiny immigration office.

With offline content they can! By making it opt-in, my site allows visitors to save content they care about while maintaining a small cache footprint.

Service Worker basics

I already have HTTPS and a basic Service Worker on the site. If you need help with that process, this article gets you started with a basic Service Worker. I wrote mine myself, but it works the same, allowing the common “shell” assets to be cached which dramatically speeds up return visits. I have a few basic pages cached. But all of my real content just showed a generic “you’re offline” message.

Helpful tutorials on caching strategy for HTML content have been written, but there’s normally an assumption that they need to cache every page that is viewed. How much storage you’re allowed is up to a browser, so my goal is to keep the cache as minimal as possible. I’d rather keep it small and avoid getting axed when the browser (or user) needs to free up memory on the device.

Cache on user-interaction

Enter an innocent-looking entry in Jake Archibald’s Offline Cookbook: cache on user interaction. Jake points out that although the Service Worker is separate from your page, its cache is accessible from within your page’s JavaScript (relevant part of spec):

Multiple separate objects implementing the Cache interface across document environments and worker environments can all be associated with the same request to response map simultaneously.

That means you can write a normal event listener in your application code and have it interact with the cache: reading, writing, it’s up to you.

For the sake of clarity I’ve reduced the example to the fundamentals, skipping many necessary steps like populating the button text, inserting into DOM, etc.

Note the feature test wrapping both the creation of the button and its event listener. If the user can’t view content offline, it would be pretty annoying to tease them with a button, wouldn’t it?

It’s also worth noting that navigator.onLine is only trustworthy when equal to false. Since we’re crafting an offline experience, it’s still worth including as a condition. If a visitor returns to an article while offline, the button offering to update the content should NOT appear.

Collecting assets from the DOM

Jake’s short example uses an endpoint to collect the necessary URLs and build the array for the cache, but I opted to collect everything straight from the DOM. The main reason was because of responsive images. The cache contents will by definition be used on the same device, so instead of caching all possibilities within the srcset of each image, I just grabbed the currentSrc of each one. I’m using Picturefill so that property exists whether the browser natively supports <picture> or not.

Building on the previous example, our pageResources will now contain the URL of each image that was visible when the button was pressed:

I’m using bling.js to iterate on a NodeList created by querySelectorAll. How you loop through your images is up to you.

Although not bulletproof, this compromise is reliable enough for my purposes. I get to cache the smallest amount of image data possible, and it’s likely that the same image would be chosen on a revisit.

Maybe in the future I could add another .catch() to the Fetch listener for images which would serve up a generic SVG when there’s a cache miss (perhaps the user rotated the device).

Save or update the cache

Now, there’s nothing wrong with just opening the cache every time and updating it. Code-wise, that is what happens. But in the interest of usability I wanted to acknowledge when the article was previously saved, and change the wording of my button and notification. It’s pretty simple for an offline article: just look for the current URL using caches.match().

// During button setup look for the current URL within
// all caches. This URL's cache entry will be an HTML
// reponse containing the content we want to show.
var pageCache = caches.match(window.location.href);
pageCache.then(function updateButtonText(response) { // Check to see if the URL was found before updating // the UI within .then() if (typeof response !== 'undefined') { cacheButton.innerText = 'Update saved article'; cacheButton.dataset.state = 'update'; }
});

My initial logic only checked the existence of a cache key. It led my code to report false positives when the caching process had failed. Beware! It’s possible for a cache key to be present without the assets being inside.

If you want to provide UI cues based on the existence of cached content, make sure you’re checking for the exact URL(s) you need, and not just the cache key that holds them.

In the event listener, add a conditional that looks for the new data-attribute:

Depending on the logic of your web page, it might make sense to fire off completely different save/update functions. But for simple caching of static content, the cache works the same whether its the first time or a repeat.

Serving offline HTML

This is the part involving Service Worker. In the fetch event listener, we need to return HTML either from the cache or from the network. Since each user can save a unique set of URLs, we must use a generic page as a final fallback.

Just like the save/update code above, we can do a simple URL match on all caches to find relevant content. There’s no need to open each cache and iterate on them to manually find cached content. You can do that, of course, and a more complex site probably will. But for a static site, caches.match() gets you to the finish line:

// in the Service Worker
self.addEventListener('fetch', function(event) { if ( event.request.headers.get('accept').includes('text/html') && event.request.method === 'GET' ) { event.respondWith( caches.match(event.request).then(function (response) { // Look in the Cache and fall back to Network. return response || fetch(event.request); }).catch(function(error) { // When the cache is empty and the network also fails, // we fall back to a generic "Offline" page. return caches.match('/offline/'); }) ); }
});

This code example uses the cache falling back to network strategy to serve the HTML. Although this strategy can result in stale content being served, my primary goal was to quickly serve offline content in situations where the network might be spotty.

Given that the person decided to save the page, they will probably still find the stale version useful. I’d rather serve that content immediately instead of waiting on the network, which can take ages to timeout before giving the cache a chance to display its contents.

I plan to improve this part in the future to reduce stale content while keeping it snappy on unreliable networks. Read that whole Offline cookbook if you’re looking for more complex caching or serving strategies. It’s a fantastic resource.

Caching on first page load

The deal-breaker for this feature: Does the cache work on the initial page load? If someone can’t save it the first moment they find it, I have failed at my quest to provide reliable offline content.

In my testing, I am indeed able to save the article on first load. Just like the “app shell” assets of many popular Service Worker examples, you can prime the cache on the initial page load. Filling the cache in response to user action is no different than the Service Worker install event, which often fills the cache on the first page load.

Version management

As with many Service Worker activate event listeners, there is a cleanup phase involved to remove old caches. Most examples use a cache name in their config, and use the activate event to delete any cache whose name doesn’t match.

Since each visitor to my site could store a unique set of articles, I decided that each article should be saved into its own cache. All content caches have a common prefix, allowing the Service Worker to be updated without blowing away any caches that the user opted into.

This isn’t a perfect solution. When offline content is saved, the entire HTML document is stored instead of just the raw content. That means if the HTML and CSS were dramatically altered, the cached copy of the HTML might use the new CSS to style the page, causing problems until its cache is updated, which must be initiated by the user.

There are multiple ways to fix this. We could implement a Stale While Revalidate strategy for offline content, showing the cached copy while attempting to update it in the background when a connection exists. While it doesn’t fix the root problem, the site is allowed to update itself and stay reasonably current.

Or, we could prompt the user when newer content is available, perhaps by storing a timestamp in the document and comparing to the uncached page.

Another approach would be to store raw content (perhaps JSON), which is piped into the elusive app shell. That would avoid pairing stale HTML with fresh CSS/JS, guaranteeing that the page always works as intended. Depending on which framework your site uses this approach might even be the easiest option, but for my static website it involves more work. (I also care deeply about serving HTML content, but let’s not get into that now…)

Security issues

Shortly after deploying and proudly tweeting my success, I noticed that all my site’s images had disappeared. It turned out to be a CORS issue. Allowing articles to serve images offline meant that my new Service Worker was intercepting image requests which had previously been ignored by the Fetch listener. I was seeing errors like the following:

Fetch API cannot load example.jpg. No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'https://chrisruppel.com' is therefore not allowed access. If an opaque response serves your needs, set the request's mode to 'no-cors' to fetch the resource with CORS disabled.

It didn’t matter beforehand because my image requests were being ignored by the fetch listener. But since the new Service Worker is listening for images, the request is now subject to CORS. And I hadn’t specified the correct Access-Control-Allow-Origin header on my S3 bucket. Whoops.

To fix, I initially set it up to whitelist my domain, but it seemed to cause intermittent issues. Opening my bucket up to any origin made the caching process more reliable. Stepping through the data I collected during this process is its own post so maybe I will revisit the topic sometime.

If you have a resource which is not under your control, the Fetch API allows you to set mode: 'no-cors' and receive the opaque response.

💾 Save this article now…

So… that’s where I am with offline content. If your browser supports it, try the button below! As with many folks on the web, I am very excited to see what other super powers the Service Worker will bring to the web. If you have ideas for improvement or questions about how it works, please drop me a comment!